Uber Eats to triple headcount in Africa, Europe, Middle East

Uber Technologies has said it will triple headcount working on food delivery across Europe, the Middle East and Africa in its fight for market share against local rivals including Deliveroo and Just Eat.

The restaurant delivery arm of the world’s largest ride-hailing company, called Uber Eats, represents more than 10% of gross bookings across the business. Uber is also expanding how users can pay for food and looking to generate more business via its website rather than its app, said Rodrigo Arévalo, head of Uber Eats in the Emea region.

Uber Eats is set to increase staff in Emea to 900 from 300 next year, Arévalo said. Drivers are ferrying restaurant orders in more than 200 cities in 20 countries across the region, after debuting in London in 2016.

The company is now looking at ways of attracting more users to its website, in a bid to take customers from rival Just Eat. The vast majority of Uber Eat’s orders in Emea — about 84% — come via its app. At Just Eat, the number of users ordering food via mobile is closer to half, according to company filings.

Uber Eats’ expansion is not without issues. In late October, a London court weighed whether Uber’s drivers are really self-employed, as the company says. If the company is forced to treat drivers as workers eligible for minimum wage and holiday pay, businesses with similar models — such as Uber Eats and Deliveroo — may have to do the same.

Negotiating the myriad payment options throughout the region has also been a challenge. “In Egypt, 94% of financial transactions are done in cash,” said Arévalo. “In the Netherlands, 90% of electronic payments are made with iDEAL.”

Local payment methods

Uber Eats is rolling out local payment methods for various regions. In August, it incorporated Dutch e-commerce payment service iDEAL within its app, and in France, users can pay with prepaid meal vouchers. This year, it also allowed cash payments in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and South Africa.

Uber Eats and Deliveroo are also battling for so-called virtual restaurants, where eateries lease kitchen space to prepare food for couriers. With no dining rooms or wait staff, these outfits pop up where food delivery companies expect demand, and sell their meals through Uber Eats or Deliveroo’s app. Deliveroo has more than 400 virtual restaurants operating on its platform in the UK. Uber Eats hopes to have a similar number in the country by the end of the year, said Arévalo.

Uber Eats remains open to bolt-on deals. In May, it acquired Ordertalk, a Dallas-based company focused on online ordering software. Uber was in early talks to buy food-delivery company Deliveroo, Bloomberg reported in September.

“Is something going to happen with Deliveroo and Uber? Who knows,” Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said last month. “But at this point, the focus is on organic expansion. I don’t want to comment on specifically who, but we are constantly talking to any and every player out there.”  — Reported by Giles Turner, (c) 2018 Bloomberg LP

Source: techcentral.co.za